. . "The Einstossflammenwerfer 46 was a flamethrower designed in Germany during the second half of World War II and introduced in 1944; it was engineered to be both cheap and easily mass-produced. The disposable weapon fired a half-second burst of flame of up to . It was issued to the Volkssturm or the Werwolf movement, but also used by the Fallschirmj\u00E4ger (German paratroopers)."@en . "Einstossflammenwerfer 46"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "The Einstossflammenwerfer 46 was a flamethrower designed in Germany during the second half of World War II and introduced in 1944; it was engineered to be both cheap and easily mass-produced. The disposable weapon fired a half-second burst of flame of up to . It was issued to the Volkssturm or the Werwolf movement, but also used by the Fallschirmj\u00E4ger (German paratroopers)."@en . "The Einstossflammenwerfer 46 was a flamethrower designed in Germany during the second half of World War II and introduced in 1944; it was engineered to be both cheap and easily mass-produced. The disposable weapon fired a half-second burst of flame of up to . It was issued to the Volkssturm or the Werwolf movement, but also used by the Fallschirmj\u00E4ger (German paratroopers)."@en . . . . . . . . "The Einstossflammenwerfer 46 was a flamethrower designed in Germany during the second half of World War II and introduced in 1944; it was engineered to be both cheap and easily mass-produced. The disposable weapon fired a half-second burst of flame of up to . It was issued to the Volkssturm or the Werwolf movement, but also used by the Fallschirmj\u00E4ger (German paratroopers)."@en . .